| Literature DB >> 26295248 |
Qingxia Zhang1,2, Dingcheng Wang3.
Abstract
In the absence of effective vaccines, antiviral drugs and personal protective measures, such as voluntary self-isolation, have been a part of preparedness plans for the next influenza pandemic. We used a household model to assess the effect of voluntary self-isolation on outbreak control when antiviral drugs are not provided sufficiently early. We found that the early initiation of voluntary self-isolation can overcome the negative effects caused by a delay in antiviral drug distribution when enough symptomatic individuals comply with home confinement at symptom onset. For example, for the baseline household reproduction number RH0 = 2:5, if delays of one or two days occur between clinical symptom development and the start of antiviral prophylaxis, then compliance rates of q ≥ 0:41 and q ≥ 0:6, respectively, are required to achieve the same level of effectiveness as starting antiviral prophylaxis at symptom onset. When the time to beginning voluntary self-isolation after symptom onset increases from zero to two days, this strategy has a limited effect on reducing the transmission of influenza; therefore, this strategy should be implemented as soon as possible. In addition, the effect of voluntary self-isolation decreases substantially with the proportion of asymptomatic infections increasing.Entities:
Keywords: antiviralprophylaxis; household reproduction number; mathematical modeling; pandemic influenza; voluntary self-isolation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26295248 PMCID: PMC4555310 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120809750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Values of the model parameters.
| Parameter | Value | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
| 4 | Birth rate of the virus population. |
|
| 5 | Death rate of the virus population due to the immune response. |
|
| 0.5 | Additional death rate of the virus population due to antiviral drugs. |
|
| 0.5 | The factor by which the probability of infection during a single contact is reduced for an individual who is taking antiviral drugs. |
|
| 2 | The number of days after infection after which clinical symptoms appear. |
Figure 1The effects of antiviral prophylaxis and voluntary self-isolation are displayed in two scenarios: (a) one day delay on dispensing antiviral drugs; (b) two days delay on dispensing antiviral drugs.
The needed compliance rates to achieve the same level of effectiveness as Strategy 1 or .
| Delay in start of antiviral prophylaxis | The compliance rate | The effectiveness of interventions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 day |
| same as the effectiveness of Strategy 1 |
| 2 days |
| same as the effectiveness of Strategy 1 |
| 1 day |
|
|
| 2 days |
|
|
Figure 2The effect of voluntary self-isolation.
Figure 3The impact of delay in voluntary self-isolation.
Figure 4The impact of asymptomatic infected individuals.